That Flipside is fairly bulky and probably a bit big for your kit, I had one for my Canon FF gear.
Not much room for personal stuff either, back opening is handy though
I've had all sorts of camera bags over the years, now just use inserts and put them in ordinary rucksacks.
Something like a Tenba BYOB 10 takes a fair bit of gear and you can then get a nice backpack like an Osprey

For about town especially travel I use a messenger bag, easier in crowds and safer too.
You can easily get your stuff in something like a ThinkTank Retrospective 10 or others of a similar size.
Might find you want both types, depending on what you do and where you go

That Flipside is fairly bulky and probably a bit big for your kit, I had one for my Canon FF gear.
Not much room for personal stuff either, back opening is handy though
I've had all sorts of camera bags over the years, now just use inserts and put them in ordinary rucksacks.
Something like a Tenba BYOB 10 takes a fair bit of gear and you can then get a nice backpack like an Osprey

For about town especially travel I use a messenger bag, easier in crowds and safer too.
You can easily get your stuff in something like a ThinkTank Retrospective 10 or others of a similar size.
Might find you want both types, depending on what you do and where you go

I use a Lowepro Photo hatchback 16L currently and finding the top section for non camera stuff very limiting in size. I think I might go the route of the Tenba BYOB system and get a nice Osprey backpack to load it into. I also just seen Tenba make shoulder bags for the BYOB inserts to go into also.

I use a Lowepro Photo hatchback 16L currently and finding the top section for non camera stuff very limiting in size. I think I might go the route of the Tenba BYOB system and get a nice Osprey backpack to load it into. I also just seen Tenba make shoulder bags for the BYOB inserts to go into also.

Camera bags can be quite a personal item because what works for one doesn’t necessarily work for others. One word of warning there aren’t many camera bag that are truest waterproof. You are better putting a waterproof cover over the bag. It may if you put a budget so people have an idea what’s worth recommending.

A few years back I got into the f stop range. As a camera bag they are very versatile as you can swap the different sized ICUs in and out. I even use the bags with the icus for none photography related trips or sometimes for work. They aren’t cheap but if you end up with a camera for this, a bag for that it soon adds up to the same kind of cost in the long run.

For the times I want to carry a small backpack I use the f stop guru. It takes a small or medium ICU so you can vary what you take out with you. The small can get my a7r3, 24-105 and 70-200 f4 in it. If I use the medium I can get a 100-400 in there too.

I’ve f stop stuff from alpine trek many times without any problem. They are EU based but still free postage.

Another vote from me on the Lowepro flipside trek series. I have two (350 and 450). The 350 is perfect but I cant get my Panasonic G9 and 100-400 (attached) in so got the 450 too. The larger one is also better for winter days in the mountains where you may need more kit.